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I’ve got your instagram slider widget on my wordpress site.
It hasn’t been working for a while, I’ve noticed that there’s an upgrade but it still doesn’t seem to be working.
Would you be able to let me know, how I can get this to work again on my website?
Website nano-yoga.com
Insta account nano.yoga

I wonder if you can assist?
I’ve been using the Instagram Slider Widget for some time now. A few days ago, it broke. Now every time I make it active on my website, my site loads as blank.
Any possible fixes for it?
Thanks.

Hello! Not sure you’re active on this project anymore but I wanted to let you know that the Instagram slider stopped working on my site a few weeks ago and then began messing with the format of my side. Had to delete it unfortunately. Just in case anyone else is having a similar problem!

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1 year agoby natgeoPhotograph by @simonnorfolkstudio Uxmal (Yucatec Mayan: Óoxmáal) is an ancient Maya city of the Classical period in present-day Mexico. It is considered one of the most important archaeological sites of Mayan culture. Most of the city's major construction took place while Uxmal was the capital of a Late Classic Maya state around 850-925 AD. Here photographed the “Temple of the Doves”, named by nineteenth century explorer John Lloyd Stephens for its ornate fretwork and roof combs. To Stephens, the top of the temple looked like a dovecote. The structure, once part of a quadrangle, has a richly decorated lower story,

1 year agoby natgeoImage by @beverlyjoubert . The dominant male from the Tsaro Pride at Duba Plains in the Okavango is on the hunt. You can see the determined focus of his face as he moves through the long grass. He’s not hunting antelope though. After spending days patrolling and reinforcing his territory, he’s looking for the Tsaro lionesses. Chances are that they have made a kill and he has heard that they are nearby. He’ll go to join them and if he is lucky, be in time to dominate their meal. #tsaropride#okavangolions#thisismytrophy

1 year agoby natgeoPhoto by @FransLanting Adorable, but vulnerable. A month old cheetah cub is checking out its surroundings from a rock outcrop on the Serengeti Plains. It had emerged only days earlier from a secret den where its mother had hidden her offspring. Cheetahs are the most vulnerable of the world’s big cats, with cub mortality as high as 95 percent, often due to predation by lions and hyenas. But studies have shown that a small number of cheetah females are so good at raising cubs against all odds that we can call them “supermoms.” They are the saviors of their species.

1 year agoby natgeoPhotos by @renan_ozturk Learning about the magic of buffalo the last few days with the DuBray family as part of the ongoing @gatherfilm feature doc on NATIVE AMERICAN FOOD systems. ~ More from director @mrsanjayr - “Being an indigenous woman and a scientist? That’s something I think of all the time.” Elsie DuBray ( @elsiedubray ) of the Cheyenne River Lakota tribe is about to graduate Timber Lake High in Eagle Butte and will attend Stanford University in the fall. Earlier this week she won the High Plains Regional Science Fair and will compete at the Intel Science Fair in LA this

1 year agoby natgeoPhoto by @mmuheisen (Muhammed Muheisen) A day in the ancient city of Petra, in this image I am looking at Al-Khazneh, Arabic for the Treasury, one of many facades carved into the mountains of the ancient city in Jordan. For more photos and videos check @natgeo Instagram story and follow me @mmuheisen#muhammedmuheisen#jordan#visitjordan #الاردن

1 year agoby natgeoPhoto @ladzinski / A subtle reflection of Keyhole Arch at #PfeifferBeach , a quiet cove on California’s Big Sur coastline. This rugged coastal sanctuary is roughly 100 miles long and relatively unpopulated, sandwiched between two of the states biggest cities, San Francisco and Los Angelas. To see more photos of this beautiful part of the world please visit @ladzinski

1 year agoby natgeoPhoto by @vincentjmusi Mary Anne, 2017 Some time ago I was honored with a very nice profile in a local magazine featuring my work with animals. Not so much the dogs but more the animals that can usually be found in a zoo or hopefully in the wild: your Lions, Tigers and Bears sort of thing. Daniel works at a local eatery where this magazine could be found and prior to this publication he really didn’t know what I did for a living except to order margaritas and Mama’s special soup. He was one of the few people who did

1 year agoby natgeoPhoto by @TimLaman . Male King Bird-of-Paradise, a jewel of the rainforest. Here you see the two wire-like tail feathers with the green “coins” at the end that contrast with the birds red back and blue feet for a striking display. To see the behind-the-scenes shots of how I got this photo from high on a tree platform, visit @TimLaman . Usually I don’t cut off a bird’s head in a photographic composition, but here, I think it actually enhanced the photograph by turning into an abstract study of the unusual plumage and colors of legs, back, and tail feathers. What do

1 year agoby natgeoPhoto by @CristinaMittermeier // Sundance Chief Rueben George is a voice for a culture that has come back from the brink of extinction. The population of the Tseil Waututh First Nation was reduced to 13 members at the turn of the last century. Today, the number has risen to about 500 and they are ready to #WarriorUp . Reuben is dedicated to stopping fossil fuel expansion in the Salish Sea and he speaks to audiences around the world to create understanding and to build alliances. He wants people to know that there are Indigenous laws and processes in place that are

1 year agoby natgeo@hammond_robin for @onedayinmyworld - "I realized if we put them in human conditions they become more human. It’s very easy: if you put people in inhuman conditions, in confined conditions, they become less human,” says Ladislav Lamza, Director of Center For Providing Services In The Community, an institution for people living with mental health conditions in Osijek, Croatia. Ladislav is responsible for a program of deinstitutionalization, allowing former residence to live in apartments, with support, dotted around the city. While the program has remarkably improved lives for many, there are still those who need extra support dealing with the new

1 year agoby natgeoPhoto by @amivitale . Fatu, one of the last two northern white rhinos alive on the planet, nuzzles her keeper, James Mwenda, at Ol Pejeta Conservancy ( @olpejeta ). Fatu is the granddaughter of Sudan, the last male northern white rhino on the planet who passed away on March 19th due to age related complications. We must see ourselves as part of the landscape. Our fate is linked to the fate of animals. “Humanity has brought the northern white rhino to the edge of extinction because it has slaughtered the animal for its horn,” said project scientist Jan Stejskal, a conservation researcher based